Hamsters make great pets and they generally enjoy being held. However, when you first bring your hamster home they may find the new environment stressful and frightening.[1] Eventually you will be able to pick it up and play with it outside the cage. The more you hold your hamster, the more it will get used to being held and begin to enjoy the interaction.

Steps

Part 1

Picking Up Your Hamster

1

Don’t attempt to pick up the hamster for the first few days. Bringing a hamster home to a new environment can be very stressful for the animal. Allow it some time to acclimatize to its new cage and bedding. Experts recommend that you don’t try to handle a new hamster for the first 12 – 24 hours.[2]

2

Use a soft, blunt object to gently stroke the hamster. This gets the hamster used to being touched making it is less likely to bite you. A Q-tip or the blunt eraser end of a pencil works well for this.

Softly speak to your hamster while you are doing this to soothe it and let it hear your voice.

Repeat this several times a day for a few days. When it ignores the eraser or starts gnawing it, the hamster is ready for the next step.[3]

3

Wash your hands. Hamsters have very poor eyesight and use their sense of smell to interact with the world. You should wash your hands with unscented soap to remove any residual scents of food or other pets from your skin.

This is especially important if you have other pets, particularly hamsters.

Your hamster may get the “scent” of another hamster from your hand and think it is being attacked by that hamster. It may bite.[4]

4

Place your hand inside the cage with a small treat in it. This engages your hamster's interest while getting it used to the presence of your hand. A very small chunk of apple works well for this. Put your hand in the cage and let the hamster come up and sniff around it.

Let the hamster gently nibble your hands if it is not uncomfortable. This is not generally a display of aggression as hamsters like to probe and test the world around it with their teeth.[5]

Repeat with different treats each time to keep the hamster’s interest.[6]

5

Leave your hand inside the cage and allow the hamster to investigate. It may climb on your hand, but do not try to cup your hands around the hamster or pick it up at this stage.

Supervise young children when they are playing with hamsters. Teach them to be gentle with the animal.[14]

2

Sit on the ground or hold your hamster over a tabletop. Hamsters can make sudden leaps from your hand and a fall to the ground from a height could injure them. Make sure you are always sitting down with your hamster, so that if it escapes it will fall into your lap. Alternatively, hold it over a table.[15]

3

Let your hamster explore nooks and crannies. In the wild, hamsters spend most of their time burrowing deep underground.[16] Hamsters like to feel hidden. They might enjoy being wrapped up in a towel in your lap or put in your shirt pocket while you watch TV.[17]

4

Clean a hamster bite carefully. Even tame hamsters will bite if they are startled or frightened. They may also bite if they have the scent of food on your hand. Wash and disinfect the area around the bite and cover with bandage to stop the bleeding. If the bleeding doesn’t stop or it doesn't begin to heal within a few days, go to your doctor.[18]

Hamster bites are not generally serious and they do not transmit diseases such as rabies.

Some people can be allergic to hamster saliva, although this is relatively rare.

5

Gently blow on the hamster's face to discipline it. Hamsters do not respond well to physical punishment. Never strike or yell at it.

If a hamster bites, the best way to stop it is by gently blowing on its face. The hamster will rear back and squint because its sense of smell is affected.[19]

Yelling or pulling your hand away quickly is likely to make the hamster more frightened and it may bite down harder.[20]